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Journal ArticleDOI

Relationships among arteriolar, regional, and whole organ blood flow in cremaster muscle.

TLDR
Factors that influence perfusion heterogeneity, such as surgical trauma, should be carefully considered when correlating macro- and microcirculatory measurements of BF.
Abstract
The relationship between microvessel and tissue blood flow (BF) was determined with two different techniques during changes in local vasomotor tone in the rat cremaster muscle. Whole organ and regional BF were measured with the radioactive microsphere technique (BFms) and compared with values calculated in individual arterioles (BFc) using the dual-slit cross-correlation technique. In the muscle prepared for microcirculatory observation (i.e., dissected, surgically divided into a flattened sheet, and covered with clear plastic), resting BFms was 43 +/- 3 ml X min-1 X 100 g-1, which was significantly higher than paired BFms in the contralateral undisturbed muscle (24 +/- 7 ml X min-1 X 100 g-1). Over a range in vasomotor tone, regional BFms to the edge of the tissue, which was exposed to the trauma of the surgery, was 56 +/- 7 ml X min-1 X 100 g-1 compared with 38 +/- 5 in the less traumatized center region, a significant difference of 79 +/- 31%. There was no linear relationship between arteriolar BFc and BFms. The correlation was not improved if the factors of vessel size, vasomotor tone, animal size, or muscle size were considered. Changes in arteriolar BFc (y) overestimated changes in total tissue BFms (x) by a factor of 2 (y = 2.01x - 0.6; r = 0.86), but changes in arteriolar BFc were proportional to changes in BFms if only the center region (x) of the tissue was considered (y = 1.08x - 0.1; r = 0.84). The general implication from these results is that factors that influence perfusion heterogeneity, such as surgical trauma, should be carefully considered when correlating macro- and microcirculatory measurements of BF.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Communication between feed arteries and microvessels in hamster striated muscle: segmental vascular responses are functionally coordinated

TL;DR: It is concluded that the designation “resistance vessels” should include these larger feed arteries and that vasodilation spreads upstream during functional demand, because there appear to be separate components involved in coordinating vasomotor responses among segments of the resistance vasculature.
Journal ArticleDOI

An examination of the measurement of flow heterogeneity in striated muscle.

B R Duling, +1 more
- 01 Jan 1987 - 
TL;DR: This review finds wide differences in the meaning of flow heterogeneity, arising as a result of the different methods used, and it is imperative that the differences in scale of heterogeneity be appreciated when comparing data from various laboratories.
Journal ArticleDOI

Characterization and function of Ca2+-activated K+ channels in arteriolar muscle cells

TL;DR: It is proposed that the high Ca0 is responsible for the apparent lack of activity of these channels in resting cremasteric arterioles, and it is suggested that this may result from expression of unique KCa channels in the microcirculation.
Journal ArticleDOI

Vasomotor control in arterioles of the mouse cremaster muscle

TL;DR: For arterioles in the mouse cremaster muscle, nitric oxide and endothelial‐derived hyper‐polarizing factor mediate vasodilatory responses to ACh but not to KCl, and that vasomotor responses spread along arteriole by multiple pathways of cell‐to‐cell communication.
OtherDOI

Local Regulation of Microvascular Perfusion

TL;DR: This chapter discusses the local control of microvascular perfusion and addresses some of the interactions between flow-induced dilation and myogenic/metabolic responses focusing on selected aspects of conducted vasodilation as they relate to functional hyperemia and to the coordination of segmental control mechanisms.
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